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Germany and the Netherlands to bolster energy ties

  • : Electricity
  • 14/07/28

Germany and the Netherlands have signed a joined political declaration to increase co-operation in energy policy, including stepping up discussions on exploring a joint capacity market to ensure security of supply.

German economy and energy minister Sigmar Gabriel and Dutch economy minister Henk Kamp on 25 July signed the declaration with an aim to increase co-operation between the countries' already "heavily connected" energy markets.

The two countries will pursue a regional solution to ensure security of supply, according to the declaration. This includes discussing their approaches to political intervention in wholesale power markets such as capacity remuneration mechanisms. Germany and the Netherlands will also seek to include other countries in this process "whenever possible and appropriate", they said.

The countries will advance this co-operation in the Pentalateral Energy Forum.

The ministers agreed that their countries will share their experience on generating public support for energy infrastructure such as high-voltage power lines. They will also share their experience on securing support for onshore and offshore wind farms and LNG infrastructure and natural gas storage.

The countries will explore and discuss options to increase market integration of renewable energy and step up regional co-operation through joint renewable projects with an overall aim to reduce the cost of renewable energy.

In the gas sector, Germany and the Netherlands agreed to share their expertise on gas infrastructure, and "associated security of supply issues of gas at [a] regional and European level". The countries also agreed to update each other on their national positions on natural gas exploration and production.

And the countries plan to hold consultations on binding EU renewable energy targets post-2020 and reforms to the EU emissions trading scheme as well as on options to reduce CO2 emissions, including carbon capture and storage technology.

The two countries stated that they "acknowledge that national energy policy decisions need to take full account of the effect on neighbouring markets".

Germany and the Netherlands first agreed last year to co-operate more closely on energy policy because the German energy transition away from nuclear power and towards a greater share of renewable energy has had a profound impact on the Dutch power market. Germany's rapidly rising renewable power generation has increasingly squeezed out even highly efficient Dutch combined-cycle gas turbine power plants from the regional merit order.

The new declaration aims to prevent national policies from affecting neighbouring energy markets. Director generals of the relevant German and Dutch ministries will meet twice a year and ministers once a year to assess progress being made on the declaration.

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